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    Why dimensional accuracy is not a material property in resin 3D printing

    Dimensional accuracy in resin 3D printing is not an intrinsic material property. It is a process-dependent outcome.

    In resin 3D printing, dimensional accuracy is often attributed to the material.

    This is a fundamental misunderstanding. Accuracy is not defined by the resin alone, but by the full curing system.

    Core principle

    Dimensional accuracy is a system-level result defined by the interaction between material, light, exposure conditions, geometry and calibration.

    Why accuracy is often attributed to the material

    Datasheets and marketing simplify the problem

    Resins are often described with claims such as “high accuracy”, “low shrinkage” or “high precision”.

    Typical interpretation

    The user assumes that accuracy is an intrinsic property of the material.

    In reality, these claims isolate only one part of a much more complex system.

    The material alone cannot define dimensions

    Resin behavior depends on curing conditions

    The same resin can produce different dimensional results under different exposure and process conditions.

    Key implication

    Accuracy is not fixed. It varies with the curing environment.

    This is directly related to non-universal exposure conditions.

    Light defines the real geometry

    Cured volume exceeds intended geometry

    Light penetration and scattering define how much material is actually cured.

    Observed effect

    Overcuring increases dimensions, while shrinkage reduces them.

    The final result is not defined by the resin alone, but by how light interacts with it.

    Geometry changes the outcome

    Accuracy depends on part design

    Different geometries respond differently to the same resin and process.

    Examples

    Thin walls, flat surfaces, cavities and supported regions behave differently under exposure.

    This makes accuracy geometry-dependent, not material-defined.

    Printer variability changes accuracy

    Same resin, different machines

    Two printers using the same resin can produce different dimensions.

    Why

    Differences in irradiance, uniformity and optical aging change curing behavior.

    See also printer-to-printer variability.

    Process parameters redefine dimensions

    Exposure, layer thickness and strategy matter

    Changing layer thickness or exposure modifies the cured volume.

    Implication

    The same material can produce different dimensional accuracy depending on settings.

    This connects with layer thickness effects.

    Why “high accuracy resin” is misleading

    It ignores system interaction

    No resin can guarantee accuracy independently of the process.

    Limitation

    Even a well-formulated resin will produce poor accuracy if curing conditions are not controlled.

    This is consistent with shrinkage vs overcuring interaction.

    What actually defines dimensional accuracy

    Controlled curing and calibration

    Accuracy must be established through calibration and validation, not assumed.

    Engineering approach

    Measure curing response, adjust exposure, validate geometry and control process variability.

    This is the basis of curing rate control.

    Accuracy is a system property, not a material property

    In resin 3D printing, dimensional accuracy cannot be assigned to the resin alone.

    It emerges from the interaction between material, light, geometry and process control.

    Continue the engineering workflow

    Part of the 3Dresyns® Engineering Series

    This document is part of a structured framework connecting material behavior, curing control and dimensional validation.

    Continue reading